Chapter 7 (Part One):
Frisky Barrington Goes to Paris
My name is
John Jacob Barrington IV, but everyone knows me as Frisky Barrington.
I had
originally started this chapter by telling you that “I am John Jacob Barrington IV”.
The sentence didn’t seem
right, it didn’t seem correct, it didn’t seem truthful, and in fact it seemed
like a lie.
Truth
is: I’ve never been John Jacob
Barrington IV. I don’t even know who
that guy is, who that guy was, or who that guy was supposed to be. John Jacob Barrington is the name on my
birth certificate, but that’s the only place that connects this (my) body to
that name. I had so little use for that
moniker that I wasn’t really sure how to spell my middle name. Was it JaCob, or JaKob? Had I not needed a passport for my travels
to Paris, I would never have known how to spell my own middle name!
The people
at the Passport Agency won’t let you use your nickname, and you really can’t be
introduced to Yves Saint Laurent, Hubert Givenchy, or Valentino as
‘Frisky’. Well, I suppose you could be ‘Frisky’ Rothschild,
or maybe Frisky Hilton. I don’t doubt
that there’s a Frisky Hapsburg running around, but to be a well-respected
‘Frisky’ in France, you’ve got to have a butt load of dollars, francs, or
euros, and possibly a chateau or two in your portfolio!
In France (and with a French accent) ‘John Jacob’
sounds much more refined; and so in certain Parisian salons I am still known (or
remembered) as Jean Barrington, Directeur général de Saint Laurent/rive gauche,
la Boutique Femme et Homme Philadelphie.
That’s quite a title for a forty thousand dollar a year job in 1984. I could have used a little less title and a
little more salary, but the job and the title came with lots of perks – and I
mean LOTS of perks!
Back in
Dentdale everyone who knows me, knows me as Frisky Barrington. It’s deceptive to state that ‘everyone’ knows
me. Some people know me very well, and
some people kind of know of me. Most
folks view me as just another oddity that grew from the Barrington family tree
– quite literally the low hanging ‘fruit’ on a tree that was better known for
its ‘nuts’!
The
Barrington clan is riddled with larger-than-life personalities and I doubt that
more than a few people in Dentdale know or care that I exist. This used to bother me. In hindsight, it was better and easier to
move around Dentdale in the fog of obscurity that presented itself like
Brigadoon around the Barrington clan about the time I was born. Had it not been for the Barrington cleft chin
and gap-toothed smile, I could easily have passed for an Austin, Kingston, or
member of the Moore families.
No matter
where I went, I could (and probably still
can) always surprise someone by mentioning my name and family lineage. “Oh,
you’re Carol and Jake’s son?” Well,
yeah, somebody had to be Carol and Jake’s son, or sometimes Jake and Carol’s
son. You could tell who, was whose
friend. Carol’s friends listed her first
and Jake’s friends would list her second. Jake had more friends so I was more often
thought of as Jake and Carol’s son.
I was a
pretty average kid, but I didn’t wear denim, and frankly I preferred emulating
Jake’s fashion sense: white shirts, and gray slacks. I don’t think Toot really wore denim until
the mid-1960s – Levi’s were for laborers.
The Barrington’s were hard workers, but they never thought of themselves
as laborers.
That’s not
to say that Jake was effete. Back in the
60’s every man wore white shirts and gray slacks. Well hell, Jake used to mow the lawn in a
white shirt and gray slacks – that is, until Toot and I were old enough to run
a lawn mower without maiming each other.
At that point, Toot and I did our summer chores in cut-off shorts made
from the previous year’s school clothes.
Jake
Barrington wasn’t supposed to have a son whose aesthetic sensibilities belonged
on the Rue de Rivoli in Paris France. Nor
was Jake Barrington supposed to have a son whose business travels would
actually repeatedly take him to the Rue de Rivoli in Paris France. Toot (my
brother) was easily associated with Jake because Toot’s aesthetic sensibility
didn’t extend further beyond Fiberglas Drive. Until I went to Paris, I thought the Rue de
Rivoli was the Rue de Ravioli and that this is where Chef Boy-ar-dee was made!
Fiberglas
Drive was the access road to the Owens Corning Fiberglas plant, and for many it
was the yellow brick road to continued employment at pretty good pay
rates. Except the ‘yellow’ on this
particular road contained asbestos and other carcinogens that the plant emitted
night and day for many years. Most
Dentdalian’s afforded their mortgages because of their employment at Owens
Corning Fiberglas. Every branch of the Barrington clan did some
time over at Fiberglas, and most of us were grateful for the opportunities it
provided. In hindsight, we paid dearly
for those opportunities with any number of ailments that developed later in
life from our employment at the plant – but, we didn’t know better.
Carol was a
secretary at Owens Corning for many years.
She hated it. Toot took a summer
job there, and he lasted all of two days.
From the way he spoke, Owens Corning was Dentdale’s equivalent of the
coal mines in Scranton. It really
wasn’t that bad, and frankly Toot tends to be a little melodramatic – but that
my friends, is a totally other story.
I too worked
at Owens Corning Fiberglas. Actually, I
never had any real hope of escaping from Dentdale, so I planned to graduate
from Denton Heights High School and spend the next forty years doing shift work
packaging Fiberglas products. It was a
three month summer job at Owens Corning that convinced me to go back to
college, and in a strange way, it was that job that also had a great deal to do
with me going to Paris.
Fiberglas
Drive ran parallel to the New Jersey Turnpike.
When the Turnpike was built, Dentdale didn’t merit an exit. So we aren’t the type of New Jerseyans who
identify themselves as a turnpike exit (that’s
a North Jersey thing: “I’m Exit 16”).
I was pulling an 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. shift at the plant and went up to the
break room. The break room was on the
second floor of the plant, and it faced the turnpike. I looked at the traffic going up and down
the turnpike, wiped the crust of asbestos that had scabbed up over my ears, and
decided right then and there, that I was going to find me a way to get out of
this dale. I didn’t pick Paris (or
France) as a destination. Hell, I
figured if I could get myself over to Cherry Dent, or maybe Dentonfield, I’d
have reached, or possibly exceeded my original goal.
Toot got out
of Dentdale by getting married and moving out past Marlton. He still lives there. It seemed like a bold move to move away from
Dentdale and all the Barrington relatives.
But with Toot, it wasn’t so much that he was ‘moving to’ – he was really
running away. What was he running away
from? Himself.
I wonder how
that’s working out for him?
308
Barrington Avenue (our home) was parallel to the railroad tracks that ran
Northwest to Southeast from Camden to Atlantic City, and I-295 crossed over the
tracks at an angle taking travelers north and south. Clements Bridge Road led folks in and out of
the town in a kind of Northeast to Southwest direction. I-295, Clements Bridge Road, and the railroad
tracks crisscrossed one another and formed a triangle with their
intersections. It was a man-made Bermuda
triangle. I suppose I stared so long
and hard at those roads and trestles that I took the energy of that triangle,
and instead of being swallowed up, I catapulted myself out of Dentdale, over to
Society Hill in Philadelphia and then off to Paris, New York, San Juan, Chicago
and points beyond….
Whether it’s
Jean, John, or Frisky Barrington that people call me, in Dentdale and
thereabouts, it’s always, always, always followed with: “That’s Jake and Carol’s son?” Honestly, I don’t know why I didn’t just
drop the Barrington surname and sign everything: Frisky Jake-and-Carol’s-kid.
Every contract that I signed was signed Frisky Barrington, but there was
rarely a need for a written document in Dentdale: being Jake and Carol’s kid
carried a lot of weight, and everyone knew that if one of the Barrington’s
screwed up, the rest of the clan would ‘make good’ on the contract. Everyone also knew that after ‘making good’
on the contract, the Barrington’s would make sure that the erring Barrington
would be ‘made sorry’ for their transgression(s).
Being ‘made sorry’ would suggest some sort of corporal punishment, financial penalty, or other penance was visited upon the miscreant who besmirched the Barrington legacy. Those of us (and actually, it was all of us) would have much preferred those tangible punishments. After all, a good whipping has a beginning, middle and ending.
Being ‘made sorry’ would suggest some sort of corporal punishment, financial penalty, or other penance was visited upon the miscreant who besmirched the Barrington legacy. Those of us (and actually, it was all of us) would have much preferred those tangible punishments. After all, a good whipping has a beginning, middle and ending.
Purgatory is
only a seven year sentence, so it too has a beginning, middle, and end. Purgatory in the Barrington clan was a
life-long event. The Barrington’s all knew that even the most devout and
saintly of the recently deceased in the clan would stand at the pearly gates knowing that some
pre-deceased ancestor would saunter over to Saint Peter with some tawdry detail
about the new arrival’s life
Even the
smallest of infraction would result in repeated public retelling of the
shameful incident. While other families
like to hide the dirty laundry, the Barrington’s reveled in airing their poo-stained
linens on the social clothes line for all to see.
Other
people’s transgressions, omissions, and mistakes were hoarded like gold bullion
in the Barrington family and at every fancy dress occasion ‘the good stories’
were brought forward, embellished, told, re-told, and then embellished some
more for all to see and enjoy!
Sure Queen
Elizabeth brings out the fancy jewelry for a wedding or a funeral, but the
Barrington’s would never tire of telling how I pooped my pants in kindergarten,
or how the underwire in Carol’s brassiere wouldn’t melt in an all-too-memorable
public bra burning incident in 1975…….
It kind of
takes some superhuman talent or incredible deficiency of character to get
noticed or be remembered by Dentdale residents. So, not ‘everyone’ knows me or even knows of
me. With all the John Jacob
Barrington’s running around (John Jacob ‘I’
thru ‘IV’)I was never known as Jack, John, JJ, or anything other than “Jake
and Carol’s son”, or,” Momma Goose’s
grandson”, or as the relative of someone in the Barrington clan who was
more deeply woven into the fabric of Dentdale society.
Jake was a politician and Carol was in every P.T.A. group, Cub Scout
group, and Ladies Auxiliary in town. My
brother is Thomas William Barrington, and he’s known as Toot. My
grandparents are Momma Goose and Victor Shreve (Carol’s parents) and John &
Nancy Barrington (Jake’s parents).
Grandma Barrington (JJ’s wife) is a Dolan, and her genealogy elevates my
bloodline to include some French Royalty.
A lot of French Royalty fled the guillotines of the French Revolution to
settle in Ireland. It is through this
loosey-goosey genealogical thread that my lust for things French begins.
While my
ancestors came to America through Ireland, from France, I took the reverse
trip: born in America, raised as an Irish-American, and then off to Paris…
My brother
Toot and I have never been to Ireland. I
don’t think Toot has ever left the continental United States. But you don’t have to have the soil of
Ireland in your fingernails to be Irish.
Some would say that the entire Barrington clan’s personality can be
summed up in two words: “They’re Irish!”
“They’re
Irish” should really be a diagnosis listed in the Journal of Psychoeducational Assessment. ‘They’re Irish’ is not a personality
trait. ‘They’re Irish’ is all I need to hear to know that a big heaping
helping of craziness is about to be witnessed.
Irish craziness is understandable:
the Irish have had a tough time in the world. In Mel Brooks’ movie Blazing Saddles there’s a scene where the villagers are willing to
accept all of the immigrants – except the Irish (I’ve cleaned up the description of that scene.)
Being Irish
is a constant battle between internal and external forces:
·
low
self-esteem vs. big ego
·
guilt
riddled emotions vs. pride in one’s achievements
·
inferiority
vs. superiority
·
Knowing that you’ve done all that you can do
vs. thinking you could have
done a little bit more…..
In technical
terms it’s known as cognitive distortions. Cognitive dissonance/distortion is the
only way humans can survive their existence.
Life is not all peaches and cream, so we use our cognitive skills to
minimize the bad, and maximize the good.
I’m sure we all have events in our lives that we’ve needed to minimize
so that we can move forward. Even I,
the ‘did-I-ever-tell-you-I-worked-in-Paris’
kid from Dentdale, have a few remembered moments that send a shudder down
my spine! On the other hand, it can
truthfully be said that I maximized the hell out of my Parisian experiences (as
one would).
It’s been
decades since I travelled to the fashion shows. It was nearly 15 years before I returned to
Paris as a visitor, and even that trip was a solid 18 years ago. But, I did get to Paris. I got there in style, and I got there on an
expense account (first rule of business: use other people’s money).
My Parisian
experiences were the defining moments in my life. I never had a lot of money (no one who works in high fashion has any
money) but I did travel to Paris in head-to-toe, custom fitted Saint
Laurent. I would have preferred staying
at the Plaza Athenee, or The Ritz, but my boss knew better, and we stayed at
The Hotel D’Angleterre in San-Germain-des-Pres. Hemingway used to stay at this hotel. Gore Vidal, Tennesse Williams, and that whole
group used to stay on the Rue Jacob (yup,
my middle name spelled correctly). Listening
to an accordion playing “La Vie en Rose” at Deux Magots around the corner from
the hotel was as memorable a moment as watching Iman or Jerry Hall strut down
the runways in the tents set up in the Louvre’s Cour Carree.
Well, the
road to Paris was surprisingly short, and frankly my aunt (Minnie Gloster) had
trod those boulevards and avenues long before me in the 1940s. Minnie served in the Women's Air Corps and through events that I don't know about - ended up serving in Paris. As they say, a journey of a thousand miles
starts with one step, and so we’ll step back to Dentdale to find the step, or
in my case, the miss-step that landed me on Air France in the 1980s.
The
Barrington’s dysfunctional relationships are legendary. The difference between me and my brother Toot
is that he firmly believes that he’s the picture of sanity. I firmly believe anyone who thinks that
they’re not crazy…… is probably the craziest one in the bunch! In the case of Toot: I would be correct.
Explaining
the psychosis of the Barrington clan might seem to be a little off topic. After all, this chapter is titled: “Frisky
Barrington Goes to Paris”. How did
I, Frisky Barrington, capitalize on the Barrington insanity to land myself in a
front row seat at Hubert de Givenchy’s runway show (Primtemps ’84) in Paris?
I suppose it
started when Carol dressed me as Jackie Kennedy for my kindergarten Halloween
parade. It was the sixties, and Jake
III had just been elected (as a Democrat) to a seat on borough council. Had Jack Kennedy (et al…) not been elected,
Jake would not have been elected. If
Jackie Kennedy had just faded into history, Carol would not have owned a faux
Chanel suit and a pillbox hat to throw me into, on that fateful Halloween.
Toot was
Jake’s first born son.
I was
Carol’s second born son.
The
descriptions above would suggest that both Jake and Carol had other children in
other families. This was not the
case. Carol and Jake had no other
children, but it was clear that they weren’t sharing their kids with one
another. They also weren’t going to let
any cross-parenting occur. East was
east, and west was west, and there was a dividing line as wide as the
Mississippi delineating who was going to parent which child.
Toot had
boys his own age in the neighborhood.
I only had
girls my own age.
Toot was
taught how to catch a ball.
I was taught
how to bake a cake.
Toot gladly took
some guitar lessons from Uncle Ernie.
I was forced
into piano lessons with Aunt Peg.
When Carol
went to back to work, she needed someone to take care of the house. Jake and Toot refused. Carol needed ‘a wife’ to do the chores that
she no longer had time or interest in.
So she made me ‘a wife’. Which
actually was good training, and it’s probably one of the reasons I was chosen
to go to Paris. The world of high fashion
is a gritty business. You’ve got to
look great, but you also have to work like a horse. I was chosen because I did have the taste
and experience that was necessary to be a buyer. But, I also never shied away from running
the vacuum in the boutique, or doing the other chores that makes a high-end
store look high end. Most people think
that high end fashion makes so much money that there is no need to stick to a
business plan or budget. Nothing could
be further from the truth.
Typically, high
end stores are 60 to 90 days behind in their accounts payable, and maid service
isn’t one of the things that is generally affordable. A good store needs a wife to take care of it. Thanks to Carol’s training – I was that wife!
Carol made
some dubious choices when it came to raising me. But it’s unfair to say that she made
choices: some of her decisions were made out of desperation. Jake was clearly too busy being Toot’s dad,
and all the other things that Jake wanted to be, and he trusted Carol so much
that he figured I’d just be cookie cutter version of one of my Barrington
ancestors. So Jake, rarely interfered,
interacted, or involved himself in what would be looked back upon as life changing,
life-altering decisions that affected my choices and direction in life.
One of the
more memorable choices that Carol made occurred sometime around 1967. In 1967 Carol turned forty. Years before she had read in a magazine that
pink walls would make her look younger. She remembered this tidbit of
decorating advice, and so she went over to Page Brother’s Lumber to purchase
three gallons of pink-champagne colored paint.
She painted the living and dining room walls. She painted the ceiling in both rooms. She had a little paint left over so she
painted my piano pink as well.
Boys who
take piano lessons aren’t held in particularly high regard. In the second or third grade hierarchy, a
boy who took piano lessons, and played a pink piano was kind of marked for
life. Also, third graders were still
chatting about that kindergarten drag routine. No other third graders
had exhibited any kid of knack for drama and so any theatrical event that was put on at Kingston Elementary had Frisky Barrington as a performer. I don't recall any particular starring roles, I think I was used more as 'filler' - a character actor at the age of eight. When you're the second born, you get used to being part of the supporting cast, and I think I was innately shy, so those secondary roles probably weren't a part of my conscious angst. Later on in life, I recognized the value that a starring role could have. I didn't really pursue fame, but fate made up for whatever oversights had been made in my youth, and rewarded me with plenty of media coverage for my professional activities!
Now, you’d think a kid like me would have shown little interest in the girls. Actually, I was fascinated by girls. I was amazed to learn that little girls had to sit when they peed.
Now, you’d think a kid like me would have shown little interest in the girls. Actually, I was fascinated by girls. I was amazed to learn that little girls had to sit when they peed.
Had Carol or
Jake given me a little more information about human anatomy, I would’ve been
the straightest arrow in the quiver – and most likely never gone to
France. As it stood, my investigations
of female anatomy were terminated by the time I reached third grade. My innate curiosity about female sexuality
was replaced with fear! Fear that I was
too stupid to understand a vagina – which, actually, I don’t think anyone, at
any time, any age, or any place, really understands a human vagina. All I really knew was that vaginas were the
places that babies were made. Back
then, unsafe sex meant that someone got pregnant. Gay sex was safe sex. I was one horny hombre, and frankly I
would’ve humped an orange if it smiled at me, but Carol and her sisters made it
all-to-clear that women were things of beauty – and that things of beauty were
not to be humped.
One of the
first French words I learned was ‘tampon’.
I was probably about nine or ten years old, and on a quiet summer’s day
I stumbled upon Carol’s supply of tampons.
It was a forty-eight unit pack of tampons. I had never been schooled about the purpose
of tampons and didn’t know what I had stumbled upon. However, I could clearly see that by adding
water you could make the tampon expand.
I had remembered getting some dehydrated sponges from Sunday school. You’d get these wafers of dried-out-sponge
with some bible verse printed on them, and then add water to watch the verse
come to life. Thinking that Carol’s
tampons were a similar type of toy, and not bothering to figure out why Carol
would be playing with such toys – I submersed two dozen of her tampons into
water to watch them expand. This wasn’t
done one here, one there; I went through two dozen tampons in 35 minutes… and
never thought twice about it until many years later.
Ours was a
normal house, not a public restroom at the mall and Carol was the only woman in
the house. It was me, Toot, and Jake
who lived there and it wasn’t like visiting female relatives were so frequent
that Carol was constantly replacing her tampon supply. So Carol obviously sees that two dozen
tampons are missing from her freshly purchased forty-eight pack. Does she say anything? Does she mention to Jake that ‘now’ might be
a good time to have ‘the talk’ about female anatomy with the boys? Nope!
Here was a
clear turning point, an opportunity that most people would (reluctantly) seize
to provide their boys with an education that they so clearly lacked. Well, I guess Jake feared he would then be
stuck explaining the female orgasm (although
the female orgasm really wasn’t discovered or cared about until the 1980s). By
this point the Barrington’s had strayed from Catholic teachings, but they had
clearly not strayed from Catholicism’s embarrassment about the human body and
its functions. So, onwards I went
through my all-to-celibate and pent-up teenage years in complete fear and
ignorance about the female anatomy. I
was probably in my twenties before I ever ran into another tampon, and by that
time my French had improved dramatically.
My knowledge about women: had not seen similar improvements. Now, on the other hand (so to speak)……..
Toot and his
friends were about five years older than me.
Most of them were in the Boy Scouts.
Clearly, somebody in the Dentdale Boy Scouts was taking advantage of
their innocence. Boys who were always
photographed with smiles, suddenly became sullen and withdrawn. Some of the boys dropped out of boy scouts,
but Toot wasn’t a quitter, and a part of him really liked the bonding that
these show-and-tell sessions created.
Toot didn’t
have many girls in his peer group, and the boys in the scout program were being
taught by someone that you-show-me-yours-and-I’ll-show-you-mine
was a perfectly acceptable game for a forty year old scout leader to play with
a bunch of adolescent boys. Sex
education wasn’t being taught in school back then, and certainly Jake
Barrington was not inclined to have ‘the talk’ with either of his boys. So, when a friendly adult offered to share
some gentlemanly advice about human sexuality, the boys in the boy scouts
readily cooperated.
Well, I
wanted to belong to my brother’s gang and so I did what one needed to do to fit
in. Nothing horrible happened, just
boys being boys. Someplace along the
line we all got caught, and from that moment we learned the meaning of shame,
and we learned what a powerful tool shame could be. For some of us, the shame was too great,
and we had to learn how to be shameless.
I didn’t have strong feelings about gender specific roles or duties, so
I was never ashamed of learning about fashion – men’s or women’s. This shamelessness served me well, and it
proved to be the key to my journey out of Dentdale, and away from the
Barrington family’s grip!
Having
achieved fashion success in Carol’s faux Chanel, and clearly being trained for
a life of theatrics, I took an interest in things that were ‘pretty’. By my teenage years, I had thought I would
be a musician. Carol sagely pointed out
that musicians don’t generally make a lot of money, and that I (Frisky
Barrington) had a clear penchant for the finer things in life. Being a musician wouldn’t deliver the fine
things in life –frankly, I wasn’t a really great musician. The title of ‘great musician’ would come
much later in my life.
My penchant
for fine things came from a series of books from Time – Life Publications. Books were highly prized in Dentdale, and
particularly prized by the Barrington family.
I learned of Versailles and The Louvre through a series of picture books
printed by Time – Life. I couldn’t
believe my eyes when I opened those books:
gilded this, marble that, waterfalls here, immaculately manicured
gardens there.
By the time I was born, the Barrington trust fund was mostly depleted, and the big house in Collingswood had been pretty much worn out by a couple of decades of my relative’s residency, so fancy things weren’t a part of my day to day upbringing. There were photos of the Jake I’s ‘mansions’ in Camden and Gloucester, but his wealth wasn’t decadent in style. Jake Barrington was wealthy because of his land holdings (a decidedly non-liquid asset.) With the great white flight to Cherry Hill and areas other than Camden and Gloucester, his land (and the housing upon those lands) decreased in value. The Barrington crest of arms should really have this as the logo:
"Emitur magno pretio vendere pretium"
(Purchase at a high price, sell at a low price…)
At about the same time Jake the First’s children realized that they needed to replenish the quickly dwindling trust funds, they also realized that none of them had ever really held a job! They were living off the rental incomes from Jake the First’s, Camden and Gloucester investments. Over the course of time, and through a somewhat benign neglect (as opposed to intentional neglect) the properties had fallen into disrepair.
Tearing down, and building new apartments, or re-investing in those properties wasn’t going to be feasible: there were no cash assets to invest in the projects. Actually, ‘the projects’ is really what they had become. Almost every apartment building was now inhabited by lower income residents, and the ‘gentrification’ of these derelict buildings was never going to happen. There was some hope that Rutgers would expand its Camden campus to include the neighborhoods that the Barrington’s had holdings in. But the powers-that-be at Rutgers were in North Jersey, and everyone knows that the South Jersey campus was only maintained because the folks at the North Jersey campuses didn’t want to mingle with ‘The Pineys’ of Southern New Jersey.
What little land Rutgers did use was taken by eminent domain. Most folks (including the Barringtons) were happy to just hand the land over to the university because it released them from a liability. So, true to their motto: the Barrington’s purchased high, and sold low; thereby destroying the fleeting wealth that Jake-the-First had created.
It was also Grandma Nancy Dolan-Barrington who influenced my francophilia. She had done a little (and I mean very little) light research into the Dolan genealogy. She had come from a nice family, who had seen her marriage to Jake II as a big step up for the Dolan family fortunes. The Dolan’s were a proud bunch, and they worked hard (as one would) to maintain their lace curtain status. Someone had put it into Nancy’s ear that ‘Dolan’ was really taken from the French: “De Lion”. De Lion would have suggested royal lineage, and it was assumed that the Dolan’s were really royal immigrants who fled to Ireland to avoid the guillotines of the French Revolution.
If a gut-feeling has any merit, then it’s my gut feeling that Grandma Nancy is in some way correct about the Dolan lineage. There is no American city that has ever given me the feeling of ‘home’ the way Paris does/did. Within moments of arriving in Paris, I knew that I had been here before. It was déjà vu all over again! There is no doubt in my mind that I had experienced Paris in many previous lives. Was I royalty? I doubt it. The Dolan’s have a penchant for physical labor, and I just don’t think that this is a genetic trait passed down from French royalty. I like gilded furniture, but give me a shovel and some land to excavate and I’m a very happy guy.
Doubting my royal lineage doesn’t suggest that the Dolan’s were peasants. I think that the Dolan’s were a highly skilled, highly regarded family who served the royal families in highly sought after positions. I think the ‘De Lions’ had enough money and enough ‘connections’ to avoid the guillotine, and that they did run off to Ireland – where they most likely set up shops, or bought some land to farm.
Much like the Barrington’s, the Dolan’s had the right idea, but invested on the wrong side of the tracks. Investing in Ireland must have seemed like a great idea, but a safer bet would have been to invest in England, or Spain, or any other friggin’ country other than that you-can’t-grow-anything-in-this-friggin-soil Ireland! Sometime during the potato famine the Dolan’s picked up their fleur-de-lis and departed for ports known as Philadelphia, Boston and Chicago. Actually, it wasn’t quite as dramatic as that. They came over one by one, or in small groups, and they often settled in the smaller cities such as Scranton, Wilkes Barre, or up to Easton Pa; or whatever small city was nearest the dock that they landed upon. The migration went on for nearly 70 years, and only World War I stopped further travel.
With all this background information you’re probably thinking that I had a carefully laid out plan to get to Paris. That I spent years studying fashion, and went to the Fashion Institute, or Pratt, or some other glitzy resume building experience that would build me a bridge (a Pont Neuf if-you-will) to Paris.
Nothing could be further from the truth. I went to Camden County College and after four years in a two year college (long story) I finally earned an Associate’s Degree in Marketing. I never looked at Vogue, or Women’s Wear Daily – and could not have cared less about fashion. Much like the Ann Hathaway character in The Devil Wears Prada, I didn’t have a clue about French fashion.
My first inkling that I wanted to go to Paris occurred when the French teacher at Denton Heights High organized a high school trip to France. I wanted to go, but there just wasn’t any money to pay for the trip. So, I dreamed about going to France, but never made a plan to realize that dream.
‘Be careful what you wish for!’
I wished I may and I wished I might get the heck out of Dentdale; and sure enough my wishes and dreams were realized. I learned that wishes aren’t just bestowed upon those who wish or pray. Wishes are fulfilled and fully paid for with perseverance, sweat equity, hard work and an undying faith in ones self!
Yes, every dream I ever had came true: but so did every nightmare…..
No comments:
Post a Comment